Samuel Johnson on LiteratureUngar, 1979 - 102 páginas |
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Página 30
... elegance with learning read with great diligence the Italian and Spanish poets . But literature was yet confined to professed scholars or to men and women of high rank . The public was gross and dark , and to be able to read and write ...
... elegance with learning read with great diligence the Italian and Spanish poets . But literature was yet confined to professed scholars or to men and women of high rank . The public was gross and dark , and to be able to read and write ...
Página 83
... elegance so much increased that mere nature would be endured no longer ; and perhaps in the multitude of bor- rowed passages very few can be shown which he has not embellished . There is a time when nations emerging from barbarity and ...
... elegance so much increased that mere nature would be endured no longer ; and perhaps in the multitude of bor- rowed passages very few can be shown which he has not embellished . There is a time when nations emerging from barbarity and ...
Página 87
... elegance , and more heaviness without strength than will easily be found in all his other works . . . . 62 Pope had , in proportions very nicely adjusted to each other , all the qualities that constitute genius . He had invention , by ...
... elegance , and more heaviness without strength than will easily be found in all his other works . . . . 62 Pope had , in proportions very nicely adjusted to each other , all the qualities that constitute genius . He had invention , by ...
Contenido
RASSELAS 1759 | 9 |
LIVES OF THE POETS 17791781 | 47 |
BOSWELLS LIFE OF JOHNSON 1791 | 95 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 1 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
action admired Antium appears attention beauties blank verse Boswell's censure characters comedy comic common compositions Comus considered criticism curiosity delight dialogue dignity diligence drama Dryden Dunciad easily elegance endeavored English English poetry epic Essay evil excellence exhibit fable fancy faults fiction genius Homer human ideas Iliad images imagination imitation incidents instruction invention John Wain judgment knowledge labor language learning literary literature Lord Monboddo Lycidas mankind manners metaphysical poets Milton mind mingled modern modes moral nature neoclassicism never novelty observed odes original Paradise Lost passages passions perhaps play pleasing pleasure poem poetical poetry Polonius Pope Pope's praise precepts Preface principles produce Rambler Rasselas reader reason remarked rhyme Samuel Johnson scenes seems sense sentiments Shakespeare sometimes spectator stanza sublime thought tion tragedy translation truth virtue Voltaire vulgar Walter Jackson Bate WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE wonder words writers written